First Cell Phone for Dogs 395
revelCyllufyalP writes "A company called PetsMobility has come out with PetCell, the first cell phone for dogs. The phone will allow users to call their dogs in case the dog gets away and also includes a GPS tracking device if the dog doesn't respond to the call. In addition, the PetCell will feature GeoFence, which will alert owners whenever their dogs wander outside a prescribed area. Will the PetCell actually prove useful to dog owners or is it just another cheap gimmick?"
I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2, Insightful)
That's why I'm a cat person. Kitty goes out, Kitty comes back in. She ain't dumb, she knows where her food dish is.
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2, Funny)
I am a cat person as well. I got my cat for free [geeknewz.com] and was suprised to see that its previous family didn't even wanted it. It made such a good pet - of course it didn't seem that active like most other cats - but I loved it anyways. One day I found it dead, and was very heartbroken. Since then, I haven't been able to find a companion that touched my heart like this one did.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:5, Funny)
To a dog, you're family.
To a cat, you're staff.
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:3, Funny)
Heh, I owned a cat that did have little trouble changing a burglars mind about that (think Garfield and postman like scenes). It also made a point of chasing dogs, no matter their size, which resulted in some quite funny situations (imagine a really large dog fleeing with some loud howling, being chased by a small black furry, and the owner of that dog rolling on the floor laughing)
Despite being half wild, it was a fun a
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2)
Sorry, just comes from observing the dogs&cats I or family owned, cats don't care about you unless you may be of any use.
If you're nice enough to them, they may reward you with a dead mice or something, though
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2)
Cats are never lost anyway, they perfectly know where they are.
At worst, they're geographically impaired.
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:5, Informative)
Except when Kitty gets run over, or sneaks onto a truck bound for Vladivostok, or urinates on the wrong car, or gets caught by animal control, or... Quite apart from the lack of consideration towards your neighbours (people can be allergic, phobic or just plain don't want kittycrap in their yards), it's not good petkeeping to let it run free either.
If you want to have a cat in a city, keep it indoors or walk it leashed. Seriously. Just like with dogs, if they are trained to wear a leash as kittens they have no problem with it.
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:3, Informative)
* In Germany, the town is considered rural; according to American standards it's probably a subu
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2)
I got a dead rat on my doorstep this morning.
Not sure what to do with it though!
My cats rock!
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:3, Informative)
Without the cellphone part, how is it supposed to send the GPS coordinates back to you?
I won't be buying one of these, however, unless they take out the cellphone portion and make it into a GPS transmitter and receiver.
You must have watched too many bad movies. There's no such thing as a GPS transmitter. GPS modules are passive devices - they listen for satellite signals and work out t
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:3, Informative)
Steve Wozniak's old company is, of course, Apple. [apple.com]
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2)
P.S. there's only one fenced in dog in a 3 block radius and it's a poodle that wears a diaper (seriously, I can't make stuff like this up). My cat could take him.
OT Poodle wearing diapers (Score:2)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2)
Re:I don't think it'll be cheap (Score:2)
1) Paying enough attention to your dog when it was outside to notice that it was attacking that cat.
2) Not letting your own cat outside.
3) Trying to find the cat's owner: very brave, very responsible action.
The only thing I think you did wrong was trying to get her off the cat (Well, assuming you tried physically stopping the dog, verbal commands would probably be allright, but I doubt the verbal commands would wo
Calling Rex (Score:4, Funny)
Bah, beaten to it by years (Score:5, Funny)
Just in time for Christmas... (Score:4, Insightful)
Please, go fulfill the American Dream (TM) and buy one today!
I Disagree entirely (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure... (Score:4, Insightful)
Or as Snoop Dogg would say (Score:5, Funny)
fo shizzle...
Re:Or as Snoop Dogg would say (Score:3, Funny)
How chew proof is it really? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:How chew proof is it really? (Score:2, Funny)
Hey now, we are talking about animals that can lick their own private parts. Anything is possible.
Now imagine if humans cou... er nevermind.
First cell phone for dogs (Score:5, Insightful)
it's not the first. (Score:4, Funny)
if you're trying to impress me, you've failed. harumph.
Re:First cell phone for dogs (Score:3, Funny)
What the fuck? (Score:5, Funny)
You know, just on the one-in-a-million chance your dog either doesn't answer the phone at all or does answer it but can't quite make out the street signs so he can tell you where he is.
I saved a bundle my just giving my dog a quarter. Last time he got lost he found a payphone and asked me to come pick him up. It worked out well enough, but I'm also considering getting him one of those Franklin translating electronic phrasebooks, in case he gets lost in the Spanish-speaking area of town and needs to ask for directions.
"Will the PetCell actually prove useful to dog owners or is it just another cheap gimmick?"
Gosh, that's a real stumper.
Re:What the fuck? (Score:5, Funny)
I saved a bundle by switching my dog to Geico.
Re:What the fuck? (Score:4, Funny)
But they can show the translator's screen !!!
Re:What the fuck? (Score:2)
magic
For Dogs? (Score:5, Insightful)
A thinly disguised means of putting a GPS leash on your kids... My guess is the pet angle just makes it look more friendly/gets more press, whereas the paranoid parent market will be the real revenue generator.
bleurk. Must be nice to be treated like a parolee by your parents... really inculcates that sense of responsibility. Ah well, you get the kids you deserve--and then we all deal with the consequences.
Re:For Dogs? (Score:4, Insightful)
If you do this to a kid, one of two things will happen:
I actually consider alternative 2 the best case scenario. But for the life of me I can't figure out why any parent (and I am one) should want either of these scenarios to come trough.
Re:For Dogs? (Score:2)
Beacuse it didn't happen that way on the commercial, of course...
Re:For Dogs? (Score:2)
I fail to see the third alternative: Either the kid bends over and takes this invasion, or it figths back and refuses to accept it. What's the third alternative then ? The one that happens in the comercials ?
Re:For Dogs? (Score:2)
Re:For Dogs? (Score:2)
Dunno, my parents used to leash me when we walk in the neighborhood when I was 4-5 years old, because I was far too curious for my own sake and would flee running anytime I'd see something looking interresting.
They considered that I was better leashed, looking stupid and safe than unleashed, looking cool and very flat after trying to headbutt a truck by accident.
Re:For Dogs? (Score:2)
Re:For Dogs? (Score:2)
Hey, you are the one who came up with the idea.
Kids phones in NL (Score:2)
- 4-5 pre-set (not changeable by the kids, supposedly) numbers. E.g. mom, dad, grandparents, 112 (911)
- the ability to be called
- the ability to be silently called and automatically answer (i.e. the phone picks up, and the parents can listen in on whatever, without the kid knowing)
and some models do indeed also have GPS, though I'm not 100% sure how that works - call, and you can temporarily track the kid online ? or do you get an
Re:For Dogs? (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, and there is that whole "government will do it" paranoia, but the vast majority of us feel that tracking your kids everywhere is dehumanizing.
Re:For Dogs? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's all a plot (Score:4, Funny)
Forget about dogs... (Score:5, Funny)
- "The phone will allow users to call their girlfriend in case the girlfriend gets away", very useful feature!
- "and also includes a GPS tracking device if the girlfriend doesn't respond to the call", very nice, I definately want to check where she is going!
- "In addition, the GirlCell will feature GeoFence, which will alert owners whenever their girlfriends wander outside a prescribed area.", also very useful. No more going to shopping/partying to a nearby city without my knowledge.
Re:Forget about dogs... (Score:5, Funny)
Lassie! (Score:5, Funny)
What boy? There's trouble at the well? Little timmy's stuck?
GOOD BOY! I'll be there right away!
Re:Lassie! (Score:2)
The aptly-named 'Lassie' was a girl. (Speaking of the character, who may or may not have been "played" by a male dog at some point.)
Re:Lassie! (Score:5, Funny)
$350 is not "cheap" (Score:3, Informative)
Re:$350 is not "cheap" (Score:2)
2. Affix Xbox 360 to dog
3. Connect XBox 360 with a wall/pole/etc. using a chain
You have just made your dog more secure and it might still be cheaper than a cellphone for canines.
Cheap? (Score:3, Funny)
Sounds like just another expensive gimmick to me...
Dogs call You! (Score:5, Funny)
Cell sounds like least useful of its features (Score:3, Insightful)
That's why this seems like a giant gimmick to me. If it weren't a gimmick, and were actually useful, the designers would have ditched the cell phone capability as a very expensive add on and just marketed it based on the dog-tracking capabilities. This will probably be bought by those pathetic dog owners who make ridiculous outfits for their pets to wear and visit pet psychologists when Fido barks twice more this week than he did last week.
Re:Cell sounds like least useful of its features (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Cell sounds like least useful of its features (Score:2)
OTOH, to call a dog, the voice has to be somewhere else. As a poster elsewhere has said, a dog can't respond to a call just behind it's head. That's ridiculous.
umm. How would a dog react to the standard ring *just* behind its head?
Re:Cell sounds like least useful of its features (Score:4, Informative)
Possibly, but there are over 100 000 elk hunters in Sweden alone, most of them with one or more dogs. I know of several with this kind of product already and many more with the old style . A good hunting dog can easily cost a few thousand USD, not to mention the emotional ties to it that you get after a while, so a few hundred is a very reasonable price for something like this.
a barking dog could likewise scare away the quarry
Elk hunting dogs specifically are trained to bark at the elk to make it stand still and look at the dog to distract it from noticing the hunter. After a while, the hunter learns to recognize the type of bark, if the dog has found an elk or is in distress, for example.
This won't work because... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This won't work because... (Score:2)
Or more probably it will remember your last location and come there. My dog comes running to me when it hears me calling for it on a home video playing in another room, but I don't know how it would react to a moving source of voice.
Re:This won't work because... (Score:5, Interesting)
You could still shout "stop you stupid fleabag!" and then using the GPS catch up with the dog waiting for you. Or shout "Go home" or such. Smarter dogs understand it and would obey.
But it won't work, because all the dog will hear would be some nonrecognizable screech. GSM is a psychoacoustic(sp?) audio compression model meant to be understandable and working for humans. Dogs have wider recognizable audio spectrum, focus on other frequencies than humans, and generally catch different features of the voice than humans. Shout "come" and the dog will come. Play the same "come" from mp3 player to speakers, and the dog won't recognize the signal. For dogs things like mp3, computer-generated music etc are just some nondescript noises. Sometimes, rarely they understand some very characteristic noises - barking, cat's meow etc. Audio CDs are for them about the sound quality of 72rpm vinyl records. GSM is just a random noise.
I'd debunk this.. at least for 1 dog (Score:3, Insightful)
It may be true in general, but there's exceptions as always.
That said, she also looks oddly at the phone and will savagely attack it if I let it go on for too long
Re:I'd debunk this.. at least for 1 dog (Score:4, Informative)
As for recognising a voice on the phone. Hell some people can't do that and just like you wouldn't necesarrily do something some unrecogniseable person asks you to do niether will a dog. On the otherhand a dog may be more willing if they are trained to do more. Also they may recognise (perhaps even mistakenly identify) the voice and then be willing to do anything they would normally. Also the dog may be unwilling to seperate the voice from the presence of the person. Same thing happend to people with the invention of the phone in the first place. But we deal with abstraction better than dogs.
I always find it funny when people insist that a dog does not understand a command given by someone they don't know. They seem to be unable to understand that the dog is quite capable of deciding they are not someone they have to obey. Some will respond to any attention just like some people. And some are loyal to one person.
Re:I'd debunk this.. at least for 1 dog (Score:3, Informative)
Or perhaps you could take the time to actually look it up. Yes dogs respond to tone. So do people, go ask ten people to do something rudely, then ask another ten people politely. Compare your results. Just because they do does not suggest that is ALL they respond too. For instance hunters often train to hand signals, because the dog can see them from a distance where voice commands are impractical. Herders have lon
Re:This won't work because... (Score:3, Informative)
I believe the GSM compression is just a linear-predictive coding model. It's band-limited (low pass), but that really doesn't qualify as a psycho-acoustic model like music CODECs are. Here's a link to a summary of audio CODECs for telephony: http://www.broadcom.com/products/software/mobmm_au diocodecs.php [broadcom.com]
Re:This won't work because... (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't think that'd make much sense. If I were asked to design a similar device, it'd be a stripped-down phone with no audio capability. Just a radio transceiver and all the extra GSM circuitry, including a slot for the SIM card that would provide my dog's phone number, and of course the GPS. It'd work a lot like those mobile services that seem to be popular in countries that have heavy GSM deployments. Maybe I'd text it 'locate' and it would reply with the current readout of the GPS tracker. Or I cou
Re:This won't work because... (Score:3, Informative)
They need to work on their Marketing copy (Humor) (Score:5, Funny)
From the article (italics are mine)
"Sturdy and slobber-resistant, the PetCell isn't just for dogs. PetsMobility's parent company, On4 Communications, is simultaneously rolling out models for kids, the elderly and outdoor sports fanatics who enjoy snowboarding and kayaking."
I may get one (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I may get one (Score:2)
Just buy a real dog instead of a crappy wimp of a stupid poodle.
Seriously, poodles are only good for kicking them across the fields, and feeding their rotten brains to their stupid owners.
Get a f'cking Siberian Husky or an Alaskan Malamute, feed him raw frozen meat as God meant him to be fed, and see if he gets "nervous or excited"
Or just get a Saint Bernard or a Great Pyrenee, these dogs had "nervousness" ripped out of their genomes centuries ago.
Re:I may get one (Score:2)
The cell phone functionality is kind of stupid. I'd much rather see some type of mid-range (1-2 miles?) transmitter paired with a receiver. The receiver would just show you the direction and distance to the dog. If it works via GPS even better... have the receiver act as a normal GPS device so I can use it
Erm (Score:2)
Ok so you call your dog and do what exactly? Give it directions home? I've yet to meet a dog that understands "left and then the second right after the kebab shop". Perhaps this inventor has a particularly clever dog.
If you have a good dialogue....... (Score:2)
Can't wait for the law suit... (Score:5, Insightful)
The Big C (Score:2)
I'm surprised nobody has asked this question yet, but shouldn't owners be worried about the consequences of attaching a relatively high-powered RF transmitter directly to their dog's neck at all times? Think about it. RF penetrates soft tissues the easiest. Seeing as how the neck is about as soft as it comes on a dog's body, I think this product is a legal disaster waiting to happen.
If there's a lawsuit, it's going to be pet owners (legitimately or not) suing the company for giving their dog(s) cancer
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The Big C (Score:2)
In finland we have had dog-gsm-gps's for ~2 years. (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.pointersolutions.com/eng/hunting.htm [pointersolutions.com]
My dad bought one for his dog last summer.
it's based on benefon esc gps-enabled mobile phone,
and has been on market for couple of years now.
the kit contains two phones, one wiith full phone functionality ( for the hunter ) and one without keyboard and display ( for the dog ).
the hunter can see where the for is going from his map display, and can also call a call and listen if the dog is barking.
Dog and bone? (Score:2)
Re:Dog and bone? (Score:2)
Shut up. I do not have an unhealthy fascination with Cockney Rhyming Slang!
Netstumbler (Score:2)
Or get several and set up a wireless mesh network using all the neighborhood strays!
We don't need no stinkin' municipal wifi.
Re:Netstumbler (Score:5, Funny)
The wheel, reinvented (Score:2)
Once again /. is reporting something that has been in the market for over a year. Pointer Solutions [pointersolutions.com] has been doing this for a while; my father is one of the early adopters.
As others have pointed out, the idea is that you can listen your dog working. Compared to the older radar equipment this GPS system has been a tremendous help, even though the prices are quite high/unit. I don't know how useful this thing is for US hunters - in Finland the GSM has almost 100% coverage. If you guys have connection proble
Power and Control.... (Score:2)
Oh, yeah. It isn't sufficient that we have an electronic leash on ourselves by the "powers that be"; we have to make the same indignity to the rest of the world, too.
Suicide is looking more and more as the "thinking mans option"
I am looking to the new ice age; maybe nature will get this broken species off Gaia. We seem to have been a supreme f**k-up. Starting from our own sexuality, for one
Repurpose this device (Score:3, Insightful)
It didn't say if the phone is two-way so the responder could respond--but I guess it would be useful to be able to hear the background. I wonder if there is a "stealth" mode, where the owner can hear what's going on in the background, but the wearer doesn't hear any ringing or other noises---kind of scary.
I could also it be useful in an auto--I wonder if the GPS is good enough to find your car in a parking lot--uncovered of course. Presumably, all the auto theives/chop shops have learned to put stolen cars in covered building, but the voice listen capability might be useful--hey you could hear your car being chopped up until the very end.
Ring tones? (Score:2, Funny)
"Runaway" by Dell Shannon?
"Walkin' the Dog" by Rufus Thomas?
"Hound Dog" by Big Mama Thornton?
"The Dogs of War" by Pink Floyd?
A Snoop Dog medley?
"How Much Is That Doggie In The Window", by Petula Clark?
The possibilities are endless.
Cartoon bubble (Score:3, Funny)
Reh roh?
Nifty idea... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Pooping, Peeing, Farting: The Scott Lockwood Li (Score:3, Funny)
Re:GPS (Score:5, Funny)
Duh.